Tenant Delinquency Workout

Guides asset managers through delinquent-tenant decisions by running a three-scenario NPV comparison — workout, eviction + re-lease, and cash-for-keys — alongside loan covenant impact analysis and state-specific eviction timelines. Covers credit tenants and local operators separately, with add-on modules for restaurant and specialty tenants (equipment liens, environmental risk). Produces a ranked recommendation with sensitivity ranges, communication templates, and a legal cost worksheet.

negotiationleasingworkout

01 · Problem

When a tenant stops paying rent, asset managers face a high-stakes decision with three paths -- negotiate a workout, pursue eviction and re-lease, or offer cash-for-keys -- each with different financial outcomes, legal timelines, and loan covenant implications. Most teams handle this reactively, relying on gut instinct and incomplete financial analysis, which often leads to the most expensive outcome.

02 · Who & When

Asset managers and property managers use this when a tenant falls behind on rent and a structured decision is needed. It is especially critical when the property carries debt with DSCR or occupancy covenants that a vacancy could breach.

03 · How It's Done Today

Teams typically default to sending notices and filing eviction without quantifying alternatives. Workout terms get negotiated without NPV analysis, and nobody models the covenant breach cost of a vacancy until the lender calls.

04 · What This Skill Changes

This skill forces a disciplined three-scenario NPV comparison -- workout, eviction plus re-lease, and cash-for-keys -- at monthly periodicity, with state-specific legal timelines and loan covenant impact baked into every scenario. It distinguishes credit tenants from local tenants, includes specialty modules for restaurant and environmental risk, and produces communication templates so the chosen path executes cleanly.

05 · Risks & Caveats

Medium -- the skill relies on state-specific eviction timelines and legal cost estimates that reflect training data cutoffs. Users should verify current statutes, any emergency tenant protections, and local court backlogs with counsel before acting on the legal timeline outputs.